Most people pass through Parliament Square without a second thought, hurrying between Whitehall and Westminster, scarcely pausing in this curious assembly of stone and bronze. It is a place crowded with memory, where history has been gathered and arranged in the form of statues — some celebrated without question, others regarded with a more uncertain eye.
Here stand Churchill, heavy with resolve; Lincoln, contemplative and remote; Gandhi, serene; Fawcett, steadfast. And among them, with arms gently outstretched, is Nelson Mandela.
Yet his story here did not begin with a statue.
In the early 1960s, Mandela came to London quietly, almost invisibly — a fugitive from the apartheid regime, moving through the city without ceremony or recognition. It is said that as he stood in this square, he joked that perhaps one day a black man might find a place among these figures.
At the time, it must have seemed a distant, almost fanciful thought.
And yet, history has a way of bending toward the improbable. Decades later, Mandela returned — no longer hidden, but one of the most recognisable and revered figures in the world — to unveil his own likeness here, set among those he had once regarded from the margins.
#banquetinghouse #London #LondonHistory #LondonWalk #royalpalaces #whitehall #pocahontas #CharlesI #HiddenLondon #TheLondonWalker #historydocumentary #SecretLondon #timthelondonwalker
#londonhistory #parliamentsquare #nelsonmandela #britishhistory #londonlandmarks #historicallondon
Leave a Reply